Cord blood provides a life-saving option

The psalmist wrote, "From the mouth of infants and nursing babes, Thou hast established strength." For more than 20 years, from the cord blood of babes, cancer patients have gotten a second chance at life.

Flavio Lopes Ferraz is one of them.

Bone marrow provides the standard of care transplant, but the Brazilian attorney found himself without a viable family marrow donor when he was diagnosed with leukemia seven years ago. His only option: cord blood.

"Our first choice is always to find a donor in the family," says Elizabeth Shpall, M.D., professor in the Department of Stem Cell Transplantation and medical director of MD Anderson's Cord Blood Bank.

"However, usually only one in four patients has a member in the family who can donate marrow, because of the gene pool and how the genes combine," Shpall says.

Lifeline to a cureWith the first cord blood transplant performed in France in 1988, physicians found cord blood -- rich in blood-forming cells -- provided another option toward a cure for patients with leukemia, lymphoma and other life-threatening cancers and blood diseases.

So instead of discarding the placenta and cord blood after babies
are born, some hospitals bank and store them for future use. The
donations are then added to the National Marrow Donor Program, our
nation's stem cell registry.

"In recent years, we've gone outside the family to the National Marrow Donor Registry, where seven million donors have registered to donate their cells," Shpall says.

Give the gift of lifeIt's
free to donate to a public bank like MD Anderson. However, banking cord
blood at a private bank can cost more than $2,000 with a yearly fee of
$100.00 to store.

Shpall suggests making an anonymous donation.
It could make the difference, as it did for Flavio Lopes Ferraz, who,
this year, celebrates his seventh year of cancer survivorship, alongside
his triplets' third birthday.ResourcesHow to donate to MD Anderson Cord Blood Bank